OAKLAND, Calif. -- The Trail Blazers' ugly history in this building just got a little deeper Friday night, as the ninth consecutive loss to Golden State at Oracle Arena became the latest head-shaker.

Playing with a roster far more talented and far more fortified, the Blazers were blown out 108-94 by the Warriors as foul trouble and a flurry of turnovers turned a dominant early performance into a laugher.

Golden State (4-8) has been in widespread disarray for much of the season, with players wanting out, the coach rumored to be out, and no cohesion whatsoever on the court. Yet, despite being decimated by illness and injuries, which left them with only eight available players, one of which was signed from the Development League in the afternoon, the Warriors ended a three-game losing streak and made the Blazers look like the team in disarray.

The Blazers had 23 turnovers -- many of them almost comical -- which led to 32 points for Golden State, and were never able to take advantage of their size after the first quarter, when both Greg Oden and LaMarcus Aldridge went to the bench with foul trouble.

"Everything we talked about doing, we didn't do," coach Nate McMillan said. "We gotta take care of the ball."

The Blazers (9-5) had an 11-point lead in the first quarter, but they lost all of it and then some when Golden State went on a 17-2 run near the end of the first half to take a 56-52 halftime lead. The Blazers would never get closer than five points the rest of the way.

It was a complete unraveling by the Blazers, who had trouble doing the simple fundamentals of basketball -- dribbling, catching and completing passes.

Nine Blazers committed turnovers, including seven from Andre Miller, four from Rudy Fernandez and three from Brandon Roy.

The team missed dunks (Oden) and technical free throws (Miller, Fernandez), and were a maddening collection of mishaps. Martell Webster was in position to make a layup, but couldn't catch a perfect pass from Fernandez, the ball bouncing off Webster's head. Fernandez made a backdoor cut, only to have Aldridge throw a pass off his ankles. Fernandez threw an inbound pass directly to a Warriors player. And Juwan Howard shuffled his feet and traveled while making an uncontested pass at the top of the three-point arc.

"We were jittery with the ball for some reason," Roy said. "And once they saw that, they attacked us and were all over us."

Early on, it was the Blazers on the attack, taking advantage of their decided size advantage. Rail-thin Mikki Moore, the Warriors' starting center, had two fouls in the first 17 seconds trying to guard Oden. The Blazers' center responded by hitting his first four shots and three free-throw attempts, leading the Blazers with 11 points in the first nine minutes.

Aldridge, who has been taking his game inside the past three games, also tried to be a factor, but he was whistled for two quick fouls, sending him to the bench with 5:51 left in the first. When Oden was taken out for rest, then put back in to start the second, he was whistled for his second foul 24 seconds into the quarter. He went to the bench and was never again on the court when the Blazers led.

"When Greg and I got into foul trouble, we lost our rhythm and we never got back from that," Aldridge said. "It made it a long night."

There have been many a long night at Oracle Arena. It's where Bonzi Wells blew out his knee in April 2001, disrupting the Blazers' starting lineup for the playoffs. It's where Shawn Kemp informed the team he needed to enter rehabilitation for cocaine abuse. And it's where Rasheed Wallace and Wells fought with the Warriors in 2002, which led to Wallace trying to get into the stands and Golden State's Chris Mills trying to enter the Blazers' postgame locker room. Unsuccessful at that, Mills blocked the team bus as it left the arena.

But of all the events here, Friday's might have stung the most. The Blazers felt, and in reality were, better fortified to win this game than the Warriors, who had to scour the Fort Wayne Mad Ants roster to sign Chris Hunter.

But the smaller Warriors did what McMillan has always preached to his team -- they scrapped. In fact, Roy felt the Warriors scrapped a little too much. Roy, who shot 6 for 17 from the field, complained all night that Monta Ellis was grabbing his off arm, throwing him off balance. At one point, Roy was given a technical by Tommy Nunez Jr., just his third technical in four years.

"I tried to make it clear he was grabbing my arm," Roy said. "And he came back in the second half and said he missed it. Now, he will probably come back to me the next game and say he missed it (in the second half). But Monta was slick about it, and as a team they did a good job of pressuring us."